If you want a specific plant, let's say the snap peas I am growing that I bought at Agway. I noticed that they grow towards the light source through the nearby window. Also I think roots work the same way for water/minerals. also don't various kinds of ants find food conceptually identically?

How much of this is true? Please correct:

I think analogous to ant colonies, plants will attempt to grow every which way initially, and will only continue growing in directions that give the most/enough light/water/minerals. If a direction is or becomes unfruitful, that section withers. After the initial state the plant will start branching in directions off of locations on still growing sections of plants and that cycle continues until none of the plant can be supported and the whole thing withers (perennials) or slows its metabolism down to the point where it could survive those conditions until they picked up again (such as winter seasonal survival of tree species). Also, it is not as if they decide which direction to go in. that type of decision would forgo going in another direction. And not sure, but I don't think plants have decision capabilities anyways. they grow in directions they grow best.

2 Answers
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The movement of plant shoot towards light is called phototropism. This process is mainly stimulated by the blue light. The photoreceptor involved is called Phot1 (Phototropin 1) or JK244.

Auxins such as IAA (indole acetic acid) are plant hormones, expressed highly in meristem, which cause shoot growth. On illumination this phototropin, through currently unknown messengers, causes inhibition of polar Auxin transport in the illuminated side. This causes the non-illuminated side to grow more and thus bending the plant towards light.

The image represents an older model which proposed lateral movement of auxin. The mechanism mentioned in last paragraph is the currently accepted model. The below figure illustrates 'polar auxin transport'

Geotropism or gravitropism is movement of roots towards earth (gravity) and hydrotropism is movement of roots towards water. Both phenomena interact with each other and share some common pathways. But hydrotropsim can inhibit geotropism and it is evident in conditions when root goes towards an adjacent water source.

Ethylene and Auxin signaling is involved in root growth both in geotropism and hydrotropism. In geotropism the auxin is stimulated by statoliths (clustered and membrane bound grains of starch) in the amyloplasts- the organelles which store starch. The model suggests that amyloplst sediments under the influence of gravity and thereby affect auxin polar transport (the second figure co-incidentally illustrates polar auxin transport in geotropism).

The exact moisture sensor is unknown but Abscissic acid (ABA), which is well known for its involvement in drought tolerance, is known to affect hydrotropism.

As an animal embryo, the seed, still closed, is already formed, with the distinction between root, stem and leaves. Tiny but already there are.

All the rest of the seed (in this case two cotyledons) is a kind of food dough, and serves as a food reserve for the seedling, until the time of rooting and the achievement of energy independence.

As animals, the plant seeks, first of all, water. The first need of water is determined by the need to break the skin that closes the seed. If there is no presence of water, the seed dried and does not sprout.

If it "feel" the water, the seed drinks, swells and the skin breaks down. At this stage we can also say that the seed is aware of where it can find water. I do not think that they have been studies done on the awareness of the high and low (orientation). On the edge of rivers and lakes the seed can also find favorable ground above itself.

The direction of the water determines an effort, which can also lead to the rotation of the seed in the right position to emit the radicle towards the water (and the earth). In this time the embryo "eats" the nutritional reserves contained in the seed.

Then precisely they decide which direction to go in. When the place and position are correct, the seed has open and the part to eat is almost eaten, then more light. The radicle grows to first, both in size and as the length. It hooks to the soil and establishes a firm basis. Starts to drink directly (and not by absorption of the tissues of the seed) and starts to push out the seedling, typically in the opposite direction.

The seedling "feel" the light energy and go to that.

If the plants have ability of decision or not, has not yet been established. But to me personally it seems that a functional DNA must be able to allow each subjet to handle each situation (consistent with its structure) in the best way to itself.

This seems to have been ascertained for the animals. A certain capacity of thought, namely to make decisions, is absolutely functional in a huge energy saving on the need for encoding and on the structure of DNA

I know little about the life of the colonies of ants. But I know all about bees. A swarm that is detached from the hive to found a new colony, it also stops two or three times. Sends forward scouts, followed by architects and, if the place is right, the architects have a network, and bees wax begin to build.

Your mention of the ants is not sufficient to me to find similarities.

so DNA encoding is allowed to "program in" "make a guess" "functions"? growing in every direction and only continuing to grow in directions the plant found suitable probably is very inefficient compared to making a guess based on a stimulus.
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0xFFF1Apr 27 '13 at 1:06

Yes, to me yes - that is more efficient and request less energy/structure than encoding each single decision. But, actually, you have you've piqued my curiosity about the lives of ants, that I know only superficially. But I figure that the marvelous discoveries, behavioral and chemical, which I did on bees, I can make too delving into my knowledge on the ants.
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violadaprileApr 27 '13 at 1:18